Taking the Great American Roadtrip
In the spirit of Kerouac and Steinbeck, the celebrated travel writer fulfills a childhood fantasy: to drive across his native land
- By Paul Theroux
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2009, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 7)
"That was one of the reasons. At first we had no idea why we were chosen for this. But it was because this is such a quiet place. Trust. Good people. No security. Very simple to gain access—to park a truck in a street, even at a federal building, then walk away. We were the easiest target." He shook his head. "So many children..."
Leaving Oklahoma City past the Kickapoo Casino, through Pottawatomie County and the towns of Shawnee and Tecumseh, I came to Checotah and passed a billboard, "Home of Carrie Underwood—American Idol 2005," and wondered whether billboards, like bumper stickers, suggested the inner life of a place. Farther east another billboard advised in large print: "Use the Rod on Your Child and Save Their Life."
The road through eastern Oklahoma was lined with shaggy trees and broad meadows, all the way to Arkansas. The straight, flat, fast I-40, which I'd been using, with detours, all the way from Arizona, now followed the general contour and sometimes the course of the Arkansas River, a major feeder into the Mississippi and the waterfront of Little Rock. Little Rock, the name, had been on my mind since I'd been a boy. It signified racial confrontation, the most divisive American issue of my school days. Black students exactly my age were at first kept from attending Central High when it became integrated in 1957; finally President Eisenhower sent in the 101st Airborne Division to ensure their entrance.
I drove past Central High, a lugubrious building, then headed to the Clinton Library, looking like a prettified trailer home cantilevered off the bank of the muddy river. But this riverfront, where I had lunch at the Flying Saucer café, was the liveliest part of what seemed to me a melancholy city.
All the way to Memphis I dodged the big scary trucks, and also realized that I had judged Arkansas a little too harshly, because the eastern part of the state was rich in agriculture, with plowed fields and sloping woods, as far as the Mississippi. Monumental in its size and its slowness, meandering through the middle of the great country, the river is a symbol of the life and history of the land, the "strong brown god" in the words of T. S. Eliot, who was born upstream in St. Louis.
The approach from the west, seeing Memphis grandly arranged on the bluff of the far bank, satisfied my sense of being a romantic voyeur. I found my hotel—the Peabody, famous for its resident ducks; and at the shop in its lobby I met the man who claimed to have sold Elvis his first fancy clothes. Historic Beale Street was just a few blocks away: this quarter mile of pavement, advertising itself as Home of the Blues and Birthplace of Rock and Roll, was also the best place to find a drink and dinner—B.B. King's restaurant and blues club or the Pig on Beale farther down the block.
By design and intention, mine was not a leisurely trip. I drove home in installments. Traveling, slapping my map and trying to make sense of the transitions, I was constantly asking people directions. I always got help without any suspicion. My rental car's New York license plates aroused friendly curiosity all over the West and the South. At first I regretted that I did not know the South better; and then I began to think of this deficit as a travel opportunity, reflecting on the South as I had once contemplated parts of Europe or Asia: the dream of traveling through what was to me not just an unknown region but one that promised hospitality.
This feeling stayed with me all the way through the rolling hills to Nashville, where over lunch in a diner, I was greeted by the people at the next table, who saw I was alone and wanted me to feel welcome. I drove north on I-65, from Nashville into Kentucky. It was a special day in Owensboro, where a local man, Specialist Timothy Adam Fulkerson, killed in action near Tikrit, Iraq, was being honored: a section of U.S. 231 was being named for him, giving this country road a deeper meaning.
Kentucky, well tended and fenced, and the soft green of its fields and hills, the sight of horses and farms, made it seem an orderly Eden, parklike—another place to return to. This part of the state was rich in classic names—Lebanon and Paris, but Athens and Versailles had been tamed into "Ay-thens" and "Ver-sails."
One of the accidental themes of this road trip was my encounters with New Americans—the Iranian at the rental agency in Los Angeles, the Chinese gamblers in Las Vegas and my Ethiopian taxi drivers; the Somalis—robed, veiled, moving in a group of nine—I encountered in a Kinko's in Arizona; the man from Eritrea in Memphis, and here in Lexington, Mohamed from Egypt, in his convenience store.
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Comments (38)
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aye. very good. highly reminiscent of William Least Heat Moon's - Blue Highways. it inspires both more reading and travel. two of my favorites.
Posted by g butler on September 17,2012 | 10:07 AM
Some of my best trips were with my husband when he drove a truck. I got to see every state except for the New England states. We were out for two weeks at a time and on some trips we stayed out for a month at a time. I can't go now because of bad health, but I sure do love to read of other's trips.
There is nothing more beautiful than seeing the surprises around each curve, or over the next hill, and you never see the same old thing when crossing the desert or going over the mountains. There is always something different that you missed the last time.
I miss not going any more. Sometimes I just get out my atlas and take a trip all by myself by remembering the places we went.
Thank you for your story. I enjoyed taking the trip with you this time.
Posted by Nancy Isbell on April 20,2012 | 03:48 PM
This was a real disappointing article. This write makes blanket statements about towns, such as Santa Fe-loaded with so much culture, art, beauty, history, and doesn't say why. 'I left the next day, not going back.." WHY? would be my question. Yet he wants to return to Gallup! Gallup is a sad, sad town of drunks and unemployed people, hocking their jewelry to tourists. As an anglo, this writer would fit in like a bright pink Camaro. I feel this trip had way too much crammed into it, with no nuance or true travel writing talent.
Plus, the online version of the had no graphic of a map. That's just wrong. Nice idea, poor delivery.
Posted by rae sanchez on April 19,2012 | 02:41 AM
I also finally made the trek, back and forth, over the course of three months last year. With rare exceptions, I mostly 'car camped' at state and national parks. Before the sun began to set, I'd keep my eyes open for a tent symbol on a brown sign and pull over wherever that may be. Wind River Canyon in Wyoming might have been my favorite. It didn't hurt to wake up first thing and enjoy the hot springs in Thermopolis. In that part of the country, I found it was worlds better taking state roads versus interstates, not that there are a ton of interstates to choose from. The book, Road Trip USA, helped me a great deal.
I found traveling the U.S. to be a much more personal journey than backpacking around Europe. In the U.S., you just don't meet as many people as you would on a train to Rome. People are more closed off, for better or for worse, and so I found it took a lot of effort to have meaningful interactions with people. Then again, I'm more reserved myself.
But, yes, it's all about the sounds that accompany any given landscape. The right Dylan song as the setting sun paints a cliffside pink, conservative AM talk radio in the dark of night, crackling weather advisories as wildfires tear through Amarillo. Or those long gaps of silence where you snap out of it to realize you've been listening to nothing but the hum of the road.
Zen.
Posted by Randolph III on January 20,2012 | 08:08 AM
An inspirational post.
All my life I've wanted to do a road trip across the states. I've traveled my own country (Canada) which was and still is very rewarding. Doing the trip on a motorcycle is my dream though. The 'weather window' is so much longer in the southern part of your country. Well, I've finally taken a step toward this and bought myself a beautiful Harley-Davidson and will be off on my trek sometime this spring, by myself, to see where the open roads take me!
I wish everyone good luck on the roads ahead.
Drew
Posted by Andrew Lick on January 4,2012 | 06:02 PM
I've been roadtripping for several decades and the freedom you mention to, "...get up each morning and set off after breakfast, going as far as I wished, and then find a place to sleep.", is what makes me keep going back to the road. After years on the freeways, I've decided the old 2-lane highways are the true roadtrip. You can now come along on my virtual roadtrip, traveling through the year 1962, at http://www.roadtrip62.com/ .
Posted by Donald Dale Milne on December 24,2011 | 11:18 PM
I loved your sense of being American.I am so thankful that there was forsight enough to create the National Parks in America for everyone"s enjoyment -rich and poor. God Bless America.
Posted by anna franklin on December 12,2011 | 12:13 AM
Wow very nice post...........
Posted by Kamagra on September 20,2011 | 01:57 AM
I hope some day it shall be possible to traverse any country on road without the slighest fear- of being attacked or inexistence of roads.that's the main hindrance in our world -Africa
Posted by on July 25,2011 | 11:02 AM
Good article.
I have been hitchhiking the United States for most of fourteen years now. I had a book published in 2008: "High Plains Drifter: A Hitchhiking Journey Across America" (Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble).
If you want to read about my travels, here is my blog: http://tim-shey.blogspot.com
Posted by Tim Shey on October 13,2010 | 07:15 PM
Great article. I'd love to do a similar trip (although being Dutch), and I will someday. Funny he mentions my all-time-favorite-roadsong "Take the long way home" by Supertramp. I'll bring a copy with me when I set off. Also nice to see Edward Abbey mentioned. His "Desert Solitaire" (among other books) is a real tip, great book.
Thanks for the post.
Posted by Peter Jonker on May 21,2010 | 05:23 AM
I've been a fair number of places - Nepal, Argentina, all over the Continent for my junior year abroad, two tours in Iraq, with short stopovers in Kuwait and Qatar. I've been to some desolate places, some beautiful places, and plenty of cosmopolitan cultured cities.
It's interesting visiting a big American city after all that experience. I remember my first time in New York City just the way you describe.
But this was different from any trip I'd ever taken. In the 3,380 miles I'd driven, in all that wonder, there wasn't a moment when I felt I didn't belong; not a day when I didn't rejoice in the knowledge that I was part of this beauty; not a moment of alienation or danger, no roadblocks, no sign of officialdom, never a second of feeling I was somewhere distant—but always the reassurance that I was home, where I belonged, in the most beautiful country I'd ever seen.
It was thrilling and enlightening and enervating just like any city I'd ever been to. There were subway trains and newspaper stands and traffic. But this city felt like HOME. They were playing a college football game on a screen in Times Square and little groups of people gathered to watch. A small scuffle broke out between a taxi driver and his fare - the gathered crowds took sides. The taxi took off in a huff, people laughed, and went back to watching the game, or continued on their way.
It was amazing, but not in the little tiniest bit alien. A strange sensation, indeed. Almost a sense of Deja Vu.
I like that you describe your trek down Highway 40 - that was my hometown, growing up, if I had any, hailing as I did from the nomadic tribe of military kids. Big Sur, the Appalachians, the Outer Banks, the Dismal Swamp, the entire state of Iowa, DC on the Potamic, the Mississippi river, all of it, this is one beautiful country. And I've not even been out West much, except for a brief trip inland to Barstow from the coast. I'll have to visit there next. Thanks for the post. :)
Posted by Ruanne on December 7,2009 | 11:16 PM
I too with my family have taken a croos country trip this summer,we as a family went from Miami to Key West up to Washington D.C. and the greatest part of our trip was to see Gettysburg, we had limited time to see things ,but we seen a lot and taking a trip like this was amazing and has sparked an idea to travel even more in the United States.More people need to do this instead of traveling abroad,there is so much to see here.
Thanks
Donna
Posted by Donna on December 2,2009 | 01:51 PM
So...you missed Colorado!! You did mention "books-ago" that you "woke up in Fort Morgan", during a train trip through our state. I lived there at the time and wrote you a fan message, to which you actually replied (in your own hand). Your thoughtfulness was much appreciated. This was some years ago, and since then I have accumulated most of your books and an enormous admiration for your craft (inspired by travel and a very highly developed imagination in some of the novels!). A grandson has two of your childrens books which I located on Alibris. They are charming stories.
Anxiously awaiting your upcoming book (my order is in). Is it too much to hope that you might come through our area? Tattered Cover has a great newer location by downtown Denver (they closed the old one some time ago).
Admiringly: grannycats......(PS: an absolutely clever short story was noted in your "Sex and its Substitutes"!)
Posted by paula cornelison on October 26,2009 | 05:28 AM
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